61 research outputs found
Low level of physical activity in women with rheumatoid arthritis is associated with cardiovascular risk factors but not with body fat mass - a cross sectional study
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>As many patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) have increased fat mass (FM) and increased frequency of cardiovascular diseases we evaluated if total physical activity (MET-hours) had impact on body composition and cardiovascular risk factors in women with RA.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Sixty-one out-ward RA women, 60.8 (57.3-64.4) years, answered a self-administered questionnaire, to estimate total daily physical activity during the previous year. Physical activity level was given as metabolic equivalents (MET) × h/day. Diet content was assessed by a food frequency questionnaire and body composition by whole-body dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry. Blood lipids and antibodies against phosphorylcholine (anti-PC) were determined.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Forty-one percent of the women had BMI > 25, 6% were centrally obese and 80% had FM% > 30%. The median (IQR) total physical activity was 40.0 (37.4-47.7), i.e. the same activity level as healthy Swedish women in the same age. Total physical activity did not significantly correlate with disease activity, BMI or FM%. Disease activity, BMI and FM% did not differ between those in the lowest quartile of total physical activity and those in the highest quartile. However, the women in the lowest quartile of physical activity had lower HDL (p = 0.05), Apo A1 (p = 0.005) and atheroprotective natural anti-PC (p = 0.016) and higher levels of insulin (p = 0.05) and higher frequency of insulin resistance than those in the highest quartile. Women in the lowest quartile consumed larger quantities of saturated fatty acids than those in the highest quartile (p = 0.042), which was associated with high oxidized low-density lipoprotein (oxLDL).</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>This cross sectional study demonstrated that RA women with fairly low disease activity, good functional capacity, high FM and high frequency of central obesity had the same total physical activity level as healthy Swedish women in the same age. The amount of total physical activity was not associated with functional capacity or body composition. However, low total physical activity was associated with dyslipidemia, insulin resistance, low levels of atheroprotective anti-PC and consumption of saturated fatty acids, which is of interest in the context of increased frequency of cardiovascular disease in RA.</p
Mycotic aneurysm of the femoral artery complicating Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia: a case report
INTRODUCTION: Staphylococcus aureus is the major cause of bacteremia, with the potential for some complications, namely mycotic aneurysms, defined as irreversible dilatation of an artery due to destruction of the vessel wall by infection.
CASE PRESENTATION: The authors present the case of a 52 year-old-Caucasian male, admitted with Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia and mycotic aneurysm of the right superficial femoral artery, associated with advanced atherosclerotic process.
CONCLUSION: Mycotic aneurysms are rare, and a high index of suspicion is needed, because appropriate treatment will certainly affect the outcome, as they are associated with high morbidity and mortality
Technical and Clinical Outcome of Talent versus Endurant Endografts for Endovascular Aortic Aneurysm Repair
The technical evolution of endografts for the interventional management of infrarenal abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAA) has allowed a continuous expansion of indications. This study compares the established Talent endograft with its successor, the Endurant endograft, taking individual aortoiliac anatomy into account.From June 2007 to December 2010, 35 patients with AAA were treated with a Talent endograft (33 men) and 36 patients with an Endurant endograft (34 men). Aortoiliac anatomy was evaluated in detail using preinterventional computed tomography angiography. The 30-day outcome of both groups were compared regarding technical and clinical success as well as complications including endoleaks.The Endurant group included more patients with unfavorable anatomy (kinking of pelvic arteries, p = 0.017; shorter proximal neck, p = 0.084). Primary technical success was 91.4% in the Talent group and 100% in the Endurant group (p = 0.115). Type 1 endoleaks occurred in 5.7% of patients in the Talent group and in 2.8% of those in the Endurant group (p = 0.614). Type 3 endoleaks only occurred in the Talent group (2.9% of patients; p = 0.493). Type 2 endoleaks were significantly less common in the Endurant group than in the Talent group (8.3% versus 28.6%; p = 0.035). Rates of major and minor complications were not significantly different between both groups. Primary clinical success was significantly better in the Endurant group (97.2%) than in the Talent group (80.0%) (p = 0.028).Endurant endografts appear to have better technical and clinical outcome in patients with difficult aortoiliac anatomy, significantly reducing the occurrence of type 2 endoleaks
Use of short PTFE segments (< 6 cm) compares favorably with pure autologous repair in failing or thrombosed native arteriovenous fistulas
Objective: The re-establishment of patency in a stenosed or thrombosed
native arteriovenous fistula (AVF) is fundamental to regaining adequate
hemodialysis through the same cannulable vein. Many surgeons have been
reluctant to use even small segments of synthetic grafts in AVF
revisions because of a perception that these would lead to poor results;
however, studies comparing various treatment options are scarce. This
study compared the use of short (<6 cm) polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE)
segments with pure autologous repair in stenosed or thrombosed native
fistulas.
Methods. The cumulative postintervention primary patency rates of two
groups of hemodialysis patients receiving different surgical revision
operations of their vascular accesses were prospectively compared. Group
I (n = 30) comprised patients who presented with stenosed or thrombosed
native fistulas and received short (2 to 6 cm) interposition PTFE grafts
placed after the stenosed or thrombosed outflow vein segment was
resected. These short PTFE grafts were not used for cannulation. Group
II (n = 29) comprised patients who presented with dysfunctional or
failed AVFs and underwent various types of pure autogenous corrections.
AVF dysfunction or thrombosis was detected with clinical examination and
color duplex ultrasound scanning. In all cases, on-table
arteriography-fistulography was performed before surgical repair. Access
adequacy was assessed in all patients postoperatively after the first
puncture and every month thereafter (mean follow up 16.7 months).
Results: No statistically significant difference in patency was observed
between the two groups. Postintervention cumulative patencies were
100%, 88%, and 82% for group I and 90%, 82%, and 71% for group II
at 6, 12, and 18 months, respectively (P =.8).
Conclusions. Short (< 6 cm) interposition PTFE segments used for the
revision of failing or failed AVFs compare favorably to purely native
repair and do not alter the autologous behavior of the initial access.
These short PTFE revisions resulted in satisfactory midterm primary
patency without further consumption of the venous capital by harvesting
segments of vein from other locations and without compromising more
proximal access sites. This practice is recommended and is justified as
part of an aggressive access salvage policy addressed by many authors so
far
A modular framework for implementing joint wireless network coding and scheduling algorithms
Intersession network coding (NC) can provide significant performance benefits via mixing packets at wireless routers; these benefits are especially pronounced when NC is applied in conjunction with intelligent scheduling. NC, however, imposes certain processing operations, such as encoding, decoding, copying, and storage. When not utilized carefully, all these operations can induce tremendous processing overheads in practical settings. Our testbed measurements suggest that such processing operations can severely degrade the router throughput, especially at high bit rates. Motivated by this, we design network coding framework for rate adaptive wireless links (NCRAWL). The design of NCRAWL facilitates low overhead NC operations, thereby effectively approaching the theoretically expected throughput benefits of joint NC and scheduling. We implement and evaluate NCRAWL on a wireless testbed. Our experiments demonstrate that NCRAWL meets the theoretical predicted throughput gain while requiring much less CPU processing, compared to related frameworks.WiN
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